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- Chapter 4: Politics in the Renaissance Era – Western Civilization - NSCC
The real killing stroke to the Italian Renaissance was the collapse of the balance of power inaugurated by the Peace of Lodi The threat to Italian independence arose from the growing power of the Kingdom of France and of the Holy Roman Empire, already engaged in intermittent warfare to the north
- Exploring Politics During The Italian Renaissance: A . . . - HistoryVista
Besides the rise of city-states, the Italian Renaissance also witnessed a shift towards more centralized and authoritarian forms of government Monarchies, such as the Papal States and the Kingdom of Naples, wielded immense power and imposed their authority over their subjects
- Italy - Renaissance, Art, Culture | Britannica
Italy - Renaissance, Art, Culture: Against this political and economic background stands the cultural development of Italy in the 14th and 15th centuries The term Italian Renaissance has not gone unchallenged; its meaning and boundaries have aroused much controversy
- Italian Renaissance Politics: Machiavelli, The Prince, and City-States
One of the most influential political thinkers of the Italian Renaissance was Niccolò Machiavelli Machiavelli was a diplomat, philosopher, and writer who served as a government official in Florence He is best known for his work “The Prince, ” a treatise on political theory and leadership that has had a lasting impact on political thought
- 5: Politics in the Renaissance Era - Humanities LibreTexts
The sixteenth century saw Henry’s line, the Tudors, establish an increasingly powerful English state, largely based on a pragmatic alliance between the royal government and the gentry, the landowning class who exercised the lion’s share of political power at the local level
- 5. 8 Politics in the Renaissance Era - CCCOnline
Royal governments across Europe sought out men with humanistic educations to serve as bureaucrats and officials, even as merchants everywhere adopted Italian mercantile practices for their obvious benefits
- 4 Volume 2, Chapter 4: Politics in the Renaissance Era
The Renaissance was originally an Italian phenomenon, due to the concentration of wealth and the relative power of the city-states of northern Italy Renaissance thought spread, however, thanks to interactions between the kings and nobility of the rest of Europe and the elites of the Italian city-states, especially after a series of wars at the
- Signoria of Florence - Wikipedia
The Signoria of Florence (Italian for "lordship") was the government of the medieval and Renaissance Republic of Florence, [1] between 1250 and 1532 Its nine members, the Priori, were chosen from the ranks of the guilds of the city: six of them from the major guilds, and two from the minor guilds
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